English edit

Noun edit

jackrabbit start (plural jackrabbit starts)

  1. A fast or quick start, as to a race.
    • 1937 May 8, Hayward Daily Review, Hayward, California:
      Both are grand horses that did not know defeat However Admiral will have to make a jackrabbit start to get away ahead
    • 1941 July 4, “Ickes Widens Drive On 'Gas' Wasters”, in Washington Post:
      Secretary of Interior Ickes' plan to conserve gasoline by arresting "jackrabbit start" drivers and operators of fume-belching autos, starting tomorrow,
    • 1993, Chicago Tribune (18 April), "Jackrabbit Start for Egg Hunt", Susan Kubian
      One little tyke had to be restrained from a jackrabbit start under the rope as his mother pulled him back, grabbing the hood of his jacket.
    • 1995, Robert Allen Palmatier, Speaking of Animals: A Dictionary of Animal Metaphors:
      JACKRABBIT START ... The sudden acceleration of a motor vehicle from a standing stop. ... The analogy is to a jackrabbit (q.v.) leaping suddenly from cover and bounding quickly away when disturbed by a dog or a hunter.